James Joyce in ContextJohn McCourt, Associate Professor of English Literature John McCourt This collection of original, cohesive and concise essays charts the vital contextual backgrounds to Joyce's life and writing. The volume begins with a chronology of Joyce's publishing history, an analysis of his various biographies and a study of his many published and unpublished letters. It goes on to examine how his works were received in the main twentieth-century critical and theoretical schools. Most importantly, it places Joyce within multiple Irish, British and European contexts, providing a lively sense of the varied and changing world in which he lived, which formed him, and from which he wrote. The essays collectively show how Joyce was rooted in his times, how he is both a product and a critic of his multiple contexts, and how important he remains to the world of literature, criticism and culture. |
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Contents
an overview | 3 |
Biography | 17 |
Letters | 27 |
Theory and critical reception | 39 |
Joyce s reception 19041941 | 41 |
Postwar Joyce | 52 |
Structuralism deconstruction poststructuralism | 65 |
Gender and sexuality | 76 |
The Irish Revival | 195 |
The English literary tradition | 205 |
Paris | 216 |
Trieste | 228 |
Greek and Roman themes | 239 |
Medicine | 250 |
Modernisms | 262 |
Music | 275 |
Psychoanalysis | 88 |
Postcolonialism | 99 |
Genetic Joyce criticism | 112 |
Translation | 125 |
Joyce and world literature | 137 |
Twentyfirstcentury critical contexts | 148 |
Historical and cultural contexts | 161 |
Being in Joyces world | 163 |
Dublin | 173 |
Nineteenthcentury lyric nationalism | 184 |
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aesthetic allusions Aquinas argues artist avant-garde biography Bloom Budgen Cambridge Catholic century chapter characters Church cinema context defined definitive difficulties Dublin early edition Eliot English episode essay European exile Faber fiction field figure film final find Finnegans Wake first foyce Frank Budgen French genetic criticism Greek Hugh Kenner Ibid Ibsen influence intellectual Ireland Irish Italian james joyce james joyce’s John John McCourt Joyce studies Joyce’s Joyce’s letters Joyce’s writing Joycean Kenner Lacan language Larbaud Leopold Bloom linguistic literary London modern modernist Molly narrative nationalist Nora novel Odyssey Oxford oyce Paris philosophy political Portrait post-colonial Pound publication published readers reception reflect Review Richard Ellmann scientific sense sexual significant social song specific Stanislaus Stephen Dedalus Stephen Hero story Street Structuralist structure Sylvia Beach T. S. Eliot textual theory tradition trans translation Trieste Ulysses University Press W. B. Yeats women words Yeats York